Example sentences of "to have [verb] these [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And it seems to have given these madmen the idea of producing a biological version , capable of creating a world indistinguishable — indistinguishable , I ask you , ye Gods ! — from reality .
2 Akashi was reported to have dismissed these Khmer Rouge demands , insisting that the peace agreement provided for the country 's Vietnamese-installed administration to remain in place until replaced by an elected government in April or May 1993 .
3 I am very sorry to have to report these words of the King 's , and I only do so because of my love of the truth .
4 Sir Frank Cooper argues that , despite intelligence reports of something amiss in the South Atlantic , it would have been inappropriate to have stopped these shipments .
5 My client is too stupid to have committed these crimes . ’
6 It is a terrible irony that although they are invisible to the planners all of us who 've travelled in developing countries can not fail to have noticed these children out of school .
7 This unholy alliance is not only supposed to have destroyed the traditional amenities of working-class community life , but to have robbed these boys of their childhood patrimony as well !
8 I am particularly pleased to have seen these relationships mature and strengthen .
9 They achieved a figure of 68 per cent of the children claiming to have seen these films .
10 Eventually the situation continues to deteriorate which it probably will everything indicates that er the situation in Vareys is explosive , erm the U N nations may be forced to have to evacuate these people and obviously there are implications involved in that .
11 It is , I think , one of Erving Goffmann 's most lasting achievements to have made these interchanges both visible and intelligible .
12 The historians Ephorus and Timaeus , who in the fourth and third centuries B.C. were the first to collect extensive information about Gaul and Spain , do not seem ever to have visited these countries .
13 How she would have loved to have yelled these words at him and finally have the whole thing out in the open .
14 Passelewe seems to have used these inquiries as proceedings preliminary to the Forest Eyre itself , as when he sat at Gloucester in January 1248 .
15 I was fortunate to have had these advantages ; it is quite impossible to operate at any level in industry without being aware of the world forces which are pressing upon us .
16 The Meteor Crater and Revelstoke bolides are in fact known from recovered material to have had these identities .
17 Indeed , the publisher seems to have recognised these shortcomings of the first issue , and claims that the brief of the journal is being broadened .
18 and erm they used to have to send these cards to Birmingham to be processed and there used to be a van going out from er Milner House to Birmingham .
19 Equally , one needs to have walked these roads oneself if one is to locate ‘ the inn low by the river 's edge ’ .
20 However , economic trends and social security changes appear to have undermined these strategies .
21 And as they came along we used to have to hang these checks on the number you see ?
22 The only sense in which the legislature can be properly said to have authorised these things to be done is that it has enabled the Poor Law Board to order , and the managers to do them , if , and when , and where , they can obtain by free bargain and contract the means of doing so .
23 We considered that he ought to have taken these points during the hearing itself and , in so far as they were of a technical procedural nature , he had waived his right to advance them because he was content to allow the full two-day hearing to take place without complaining at the outset that he had been prejudiced by short notice of the hearing or by any procedural irregularity in the way the preliminary issue had been brought before the court .
24 Both companies were thought to have taken these steps because of fears that a future SPD government would abandon the plant .
25 The almost complete lack of response , one way or the other , from the Masai , only seems to have encouraged these fantasies , because it provided an environment in which fantasy was rarely tested against reality .
26 Eliot seems to have ignored these suggestions because for him the physical and social landscape of London was no more than a screen on which to project a phantasmagoria that expressed his own personal disorders and desperations ( partly sexual , as one might expect , and as the drafts make clear ) ; whereas Pound seems to have supposed that the subject of the poem was London in all its historical and geographical actuality , much as the city of Dublin was from one point of view the subject of Joyce 's Ulysses .
27 It may be that ‘ post ’ will need progressive reinterpretation to include telex , facsimile transmission and other forms of ‘ electronic mail ’ but international conventions appear not to have explored these possibilities thus far .
28 If we can trust the figures which suggest that Christians tended to marry at a notably higher age than their pagan contemporaries , Christianity would appear to have reinforced these shifts towards marriage as a more personal and free partnership of equals .
29 It was disquieting , though , the way he seemed to have to make these excuses to himself , as if his conscience which he had , so he thought at the age of sixteen , successfully buried , had suddenly reawakened to plague him , not about the fundamentals of belief and morality but about such comparative trivialities as whether or not one should attend the church bazaar .
30 They are thought to have evolved these tails , lacking in all Old World monkeys , because they needed an extra ‘ hand ’ to cope with life in forests that were often flooded .
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